Skip to main content

page search

Displaying 10765 - 10776 of 13044

Evolution of land tenure institutions and development of agroforestry: evidence from customary land areas of Sumatra

Reports & Research
May, 2001
Global

It is widely believed that land tenure insecurity under a customary tenure system leads to a socially inefficient resource allocation. This article demonstrates that the practice of granting secure individual ownership to tree planters spurs earlier tree planting, which is inefficient from the private point of view but could be efficient from the viewpoint of the global environment. Regression analysis, based on primary data collected in Sumatra, indicates that an expected increase in tenure security in fact led to early tree planting.

An Overview of National Forest Funds: Current Approaches and Future Opportunities

Journal Articles & Books
March, 2001
Burkina Faso
Lithuania
Gambia
Croatia
France
Guatemala
Indonesia
Bulgaria
Laos
Bolivia
Canada
Congo
Guinea
Costa Rica
Cameroon
Cyprus
Lesotho
Albania
Madagascar
Italy
Norway
Brazil
Cuba

This paper presents an overview of the various approaches that developed and developing countries have used in designing national forest funds. It is based on a study of legislation in over forty countries and a review of some of the few empirical studies of forest fund performance. The overview may serve as checklist of issues and options for policymakers who are designing funds. It also may illuminate ongoing discussions about appropriate international roles in forest financing. The paper presents some of the common arguments for and against the use of dedicated funds.

Making Progress – Slowly. New Attention to Women’s Rights in Natural Resource Law Reform in Africa

Reports & Research
February, 2001
Africa

Critical shifts are affecting rural resource rights in Africa through widespread reform in land, forestry and other laws. The cutting edge of transformation affecting women is in emerging new provision for wives to hold family property as co-owners with their husbands, which could play a main role in revitalising smallholder agriculture. Recognition that equity in domestic land relations may ultimately be a prerequisite to the modernisation of subsistence agriculture in agrarian economies is the thesis underlying the analysis of legal texts in this paper.

Paper tiger, hidden dragons: the responsibility of international financial institutions for Indonesian forest destruction, social conflict and the financial crisis of Asia Pulp & Paper

December, 2000
Indonesia
Malaysia
Eastern Asia
Oceania

This report documents the environmental and social impacts of Asia Pulp & Paper (APP), assesses the role of international financial institutions in fuelling APP’s unsustainable and damaging operations and examines the link between this unsustainable practice and APP's financial crisis.Financial institutions should acknowledge that it is far more than the financial failure of APP that proves that they seriously underestimated the risk in financing the company.

From users to custodians: changing relations between people and the state in forest management in Tanzania

December, 2000
Tanzania
Sub-Saharan Africa

This paper begins by discussing Tanzania's increasing recognition of the need to bring individuals, local groups, and communities into the policy, planning, and management process if woodlands are to remain productive in the coming decades.The article finds that:central control of forests takes management responsibility away from the communities most dependent on them, inevitably resulting in tensionsTanzania has enthusiastically established community-owned and -managed forest reservesthe most successful initiatives involving communities and individuals have been those that moved away from

The IMF funding deforestation: how International Monetary Fund loans and policies are responsible for global forest loss

December, 2000
Honduras
Chile
Ukraine
Indonesia
Kyrgyzstan
Ghana
Kazakhstan
Moldova
Guyana
Belarus
Central African Republic
Nicaragua
Tajikistan
Turkmenistan
Madagascar
Uzbekistan
Cameroon
Tanzania
Ecuador
Papua New Guinea
Russia
Armenia
Brazil
Oceania
Sub-Saharan Africa
Latin America and the Caribbean
Eastern Asia

Report which alleges that International Monetary Fund (IMF) loans and policies have caused extensive deforestation in each of the 15 countries of Africa, Latin America, and Asia studied.This forest loss, the author claims, has occurred both directly and indirectly through:the IMF's promotion of foreign investment in natural resource sectorsausterity measures that cut spending on environmental programsprograms that have unwittingly worsened the conditions of povertythe IMF.s insistence upon export-oriented economic growth.The report finds that:IMF induced cuts have impeded:Promotion of resp

Land tenure and land conflict in the South Pacific

December, 2000
Fiji
Vanuatu
Papua New Guinea
Micronesia
Oceania
Sub-Saharan Africa
Eastern Asia

The paper is a desk study prepared as a basis for discussion and further field research into land tenure and conflict in the region.The first section provides an overview of land tenure and land utilization issues. This section includes an analysis of gender and other demographic issues as they relate to land tenure and access to natural resources.

How the location of roads and protected areas affects deforestation in North Thailand

December, 2000
Thailand
Eastern Asia
Oceania

This article discusses the extent to which the location of roads s and protected areas affects deforestation in North Thailand. The article stresses that establishing protected areas (national parks together with wildlife sanctuaries) in North Thailand did not reduce the likelihood of forest clearing, but wildlife sanctuaries may have reduced the probability of deforestation.

What drives tropical deforestation?: a meta-analysis of proximate and underlying causes of deforestation based on subnational case study evidence

December, 2000
Sub-Saharan Africa
Latin America and the Caribbean

Using the framework of the Land Use and Cover Change (LUCC) Science/Research Plan this study takes 152 studies of deforestation in different regions of varying size from around the tropics and analyses them to assess how important different causes of deforestation really are.

Potential carbon mitigation and income in developing countries from changes in use and management of agricultural and forest lands

December, 2000

This paper explores the opportunities for mitigating atmospheric carbon emissions and generating development income in developing countries through a combination of sustainable agricultural practices on existing lands, slowing tropical deforestation, and reforesting degraded lands.The analysis shows that over the next ten years, forty-eight major tropical and subtropical developing countries have the potential to reduce the atmospheric carbon burden by about 2.2 billion tonnes of carbon.